User talk:Mannymad

involute
English

[edit]Etymology From Latin involutus. [edit]Adjective

Wikipedia has an article on: Involute involute (comparative more involute, superlative most involute) (formal) Difficult to understand; complicated. (botany) Having the edges rolled with the adaxial side outward. [quotations ▼] (biology, of shells) Having a complex pattern of coils. [edit]Verb involute (third-person singular simple present involutes, present participle involuting, simple past and past participle involuted) To roll or curl inwards. [edit]Noun involute (plural involutes) (mathematics) A curve that cuts all tangents of another curve at right angles; traced by a point on a string that unwinds from a curved object. [edit]See also involution convolute revolute [edit]Italian

[edit]Adjective involute f Feminine plural form of involuto [edit]Latin

[edit]Participle involūte